Preview
Identifier
20031566
Description
Staff Sergeant James R. Taylor with his parents, Mr. and Mrs J. R. Taylor, and his wife.Four people standing on the porch of 1472 [street unknown]. An older man, Mr. J. R. Taylor, on the left, in a light shirt, dark printed tie and clip, suspenders and dark trousers. Next to him is Elizabeth Taylor in a skirt and sweater with 3/4 length sleeves. She is wearing three strands of graduated pearls and a ring. James Taylor is standing with a hand on his wife's shoulder and a hand (with a ring) on his mother's shoulder. He is in dress uniform with a dark jacket and trousers, lighter shirt and solid color tie, and a wide belt over the jacket. His garrison cap is darker than the uniform. He has military insignia on his collar and decoration ribbons and clusters over his breast pocket. His mother is wearing a dark dress with a light lace-work collar and a broach at her neckline. The porch is has narrow clapboard siding and a screen door in view Clipping (accompanied second photo in envelope - for context):"Veteran With British 8th Visits Fort Worth ParentsStaff Sgt. James R. Taylor, 24, who served with the British 8th Army as a gunner in a tank unit in the battle which raged from El Alemein [Egypt] to Tripoli [Libya]is in Fort Worth visiting is parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. R. Taylor, 1024 Bessie, after 18 months overseas.His first lesson in dodging enemy fire came early. Two days after he landed in Cairo he was injured in an air raid on the Heliopolis Airport. 'I got curious and stuck my head out to see what was going on,' he said, 'and a piece of shrapnel put me in the hospital for 10 days.'He was stationed in the Middle East with a medical unit when two men were needed to go into the desert. Wanting 'to get out and see some action,' he volunteered. Twenty miles from Tobruk [Libya] he joined the British army and didn't stop fighting until they went into reserve at Tripoli in July. All of it was rough going, he says, but the hardest blow was the death of his best friend who was shot as they rode back to the lines in a jeep.He rejoined the United States forces and was assigned to a hospital unit. He spent 38 days in Sicily. The Italians, he reports, were exceedingly hospitable, 'inviting us to their homes for tea and wine.' From there he went to England on board a hospital ship. On Sept. 16 [1943] he left Liverpool and landed in Brooklyn Nov. 8.'What they boys over there want most is cigarettes, hard candies, canned fruit and woolen sweater,'Taylor attended Polytechnic High School before enlisting in the Army six years ago. He trained at Fort Sam Houston, Water Reed General Hospital in Washington, D. C., and Stark General Hospital in Charleston, S.C.His wife, the former Elizabeth Hefner of Silver Spring, Md., accompanied him here. They will leave Tuesday.He has a brother, Ralph Taylor, and two sisters, Mrs. Clarence Tally and Mrs. Horace Dumas, living in Fort Worth. Another Sister, Mrs. Mozelle Young, resides in Sherman."
Archival Date
1943-11-15
Collection Name
Fort Worth Star-Telegram Collection
Collection Number
AR406-6-296
Original Format
Negatives, Black & White
File Format
JPG
Rights
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Subjects
Families; Front porches; Military uniforms; Military personnel; Couples; Neckties; Necklaces
Names
Taylor, James R.; Taylor, J. R.; Taylor, J. R. (Mrs.); Taylor, Elizabeth Hefner
Subjects
Families; Front porches; Military uniforms; Military personnel; Couples; Neckties; Necklaces